Cosmetic Skin Care Center in Washington is a professional hair removal center that provides guests with gentle and effective treatments.
Keep your skin looking young and wrinkle free with a facial from this salon.
Looking for top hair removal services? Try one of the many services this establishment has to offer, such as waxing, threading, laser hair removal, electrolysis, and epilation.
If you're looking for a quick way to remove those unwanted hairs, call Cosmetic Skin Care Center for pain-free and easy treatments.

Enchantments Laser Hair Rmvl in McMurray provides painless hair removal services that will have you bathing suit-ready in no time.
Treat yourself to something special and head to this salon for a customized facial.
Enchantments Laser Hair Rmvl has a wide variety of hair removal services that will leave you feeling silky smooth.
Looking for a new hair salon? Refresh your luscious locks at this salon.
Learn more about the best methods of hair removal at Enchantments Laser Hair Rmvl, and put yourself on the path to a hair-free lifestyle.

Cecilia's, a full-service salon in Carnegie, serves up the most unique and beneficial beauty treatments.
Have a long day? Pamper yourself with a relaxing and hydrating facial.
At Cecilia's, you can find skin care treatments to meet your skin's specific needs.
With services like no-chip gel manicures, pedicures, manicures, and nail art, you can keep your nails looking clean, fresh and trendy.
If you're looking for great hair remedies, such as hair cuts, styling, color and highlights, and perms, head on over to this salon.
A professional hair removal treatment is the most effective way to keep unwanted body hair away longer.
Luxury at an affordable price? Who wouldn't want that? Gets your nails done at Cecilia's and feel on top of the world.

Whether you're looking to reduce or completely remove the unwanted hair on your body, Louise's Electrologist in Belle Vernon has a hair removal remedy for you.
A facial from this salon is your first step to clearer and healthier skin.
Louise's Electrologist's hair removal services are quick and effective, leaving you feeling refreshed.
Treat yourself to a cut and color at this salon, a top-notch salon.
When you're in dire need of a fresh grooming, call Louise's Electrologist today and discover the endless hair removal possibilities.

Charleroi's Joyrena Leccia Electrolysis provides discreet and long-lasting hair removal services for every single guest.
Keep those pores clear with a relaxing facial courtesy of the salon's expert aestheticians.
Enjoy a relaxing hair makeover at this salon and leave feeling refreshed.
Skip the hassle of shaving, waxing and plucking and treat yourself to a professional hair removal service.
If you're looking for a quick way to remove those unwanted hairs, call Joyrena Leccia Electrolysis for pain-free and easy treatments.

Groupon Guide

If you’re like most people, your first time plucking your eyebrows marked the beginning of a long, sometimes painful eyebrow-maintenance journey. From there, the road forked into a thousand possible paths: you could keep plucking or graduate to waxing or threading. And these days there are even more possibilities. You can shirk brow-thinning all together and go in the complete opposite direction with eyebrow extensions. Or you can go all-in and give yourself this eyebrow makeover, which involves seven different products (don’t skip highlighter!).Who knew a simple set of tweezers could lead to such a complicated, exhausting endeavor? Which raises the question: how young is too young to start plucking your eyebrows? And what do you need to know before you attempt to master the art of the arch? To find out, we asked a professional eyebrow waxer, a teen, a mom, and a guidance counselor to weigh in.Is Your Kid Ready?Some questions to consider before you hand over the tweezers.Is your kid self-conscious about her (or his!) brows? True, looks aren’t everything. But they can feel important, especially to teenagers. Junior-high English teacher and mom Lauren Pedecone said, “A parent has to consider the effect [a kid’s] eyebrows could be having on her self-confidence. Is she being made fun of? Or is it very bothersome? If so, then this might be a small change that could help greatly.”Does your kid know about over-plucking? Sure, most kids who are anxious about their appearance are going to be careful not to pluck away a ridiculous amount of hair the first time. But Elena Serbu, an aesthetician at Asanda Aveda Spa Lounge, said over-plucking actually happens slowly, over time. You don’t notice it at first, but she said she has tons of clients in their 20s who come to her saying, “I don’t have enough eyebrows.”This is a risk whatever your age. To avoid damage to the eyebrows, she recommends plucking at most every six weeks.Does your kid understand thick brows can be beautiful? If she has specific quibbles with her brows’ exact shape or wants to divide up a unibrow, that’s fine. Just make sure that she realizes thick brows are just as beautiful as thin ones—if not more so. They can make a face expressive. Or, as Elena put it, "Eyebrows are your personality.”Has your kid considered waxing and threading, too?Elena waxes eyebrows and recommends it for teens. (Younger kids’ skin is often too sensitive for the treatment, and “there’s a risk of peeling skin.”)High-school senior Lily Binkus recently switched over from waxing to threading. In her experience, at least, it goes more quickly and leaves longer-lasting results—which makes it great for kids who aren’t ready for the upkeep.Can your kid describe the look she wants? This is especially important if when soliciting the help of a professional, as Lily found out during one of her first threading appointments. “[The lady] tried to thread my forehead. Like, the whole thing. I was like, ‘What are you doing?’” She was was worried that by her next appointment, her forehead would be covered in hair.(It wasn’t, though! She’s OK.)Do you want to be hands-off about the whole thing? That might not be the best idea. This is the type of beauty endeavor it pays to supervise or at least rigorously discuss beforehand, said high-school guidance counselor and mom Lora Alexander-Flaherty. She recommends making your daughter’s first round of plucking a mother-daughter (or beauty mentor-daughter) activity, “so your child is not that one kid that [everyone’s] like, 'Oooh, what happened to you?'"So What’s The Right Age?Elena thinks it varies, depending on the method. For plucking, she recommends waiting until 20 to avoid accidental over-tweezing. For waxing, she recommends waiting until at least 14, the year skin sensitivity starts to drop off.
Lauren thinks sometime in late middle school is the right time—around 12 or 13 years old.Lora recommends roughly 16, the year of many kids’ first major school dance. "But if they've got a unibrow, they better start as early as possible."Lily thinks 13–14 is the right age.Photo Illustration by Mark Mills, GrouponAge is just a number. Except when it comes to these articles:What's the Right Age For Your First Tattoo?What's the Right Age to Start Shaving Your Legs?

My run with eyebrow waxing ended the day I got sneezed on.Yes, sneezed on. I was laying comfortably on the aesthetician’s table—well, as comfortably as you can when someone’s using hot wax to rip hair off your face—when, just as she was pulling a wax strip off my skin, she sneezed. Needless to say, the outburst messed up her form a bit. I left the spa with seriously uneven brows and spent the next couple weeks looking like I was in a constant state of surprise.The incident inspired me to look into eyebrow threading, an Eastern technique in which aestheticians use thread to entwine hair and pull it out at the root. I’ve been a convert for three years, mostly thanks to the following three reasons:1. All you need is thread.There’s so much less fuss that goes into a threading session. No warmers melting open pots of wax. No cutting of cloth strips. No arsenal of products to prep and soothe the skin. No tweezers to remove the hairs the wax missed.During my sessions with Cristy at marimarshe’ salon (2251 S. Michigan Ave.), all she uses is Organica, an organic thread specially designed for hair removal. It allows for much more precision than waxing, so she’s able to get every hair with this single tool. If necessary, she’ll brush up my brows afterward and trim excess length with brow scissors. But that’s it. The whole session takes 10 minutes or less, and it’s amazing how cleanly my brows are shaped.2. Compared to waxing, it’s much less painful.I mean, it’s not the best feeling in the world. You do feel the hairs being pulled out. But the sensation passes quickly—there’s no residual pain like with waxing. I will say that it’s a bit more uncomfortable when she’s working below the brows, because that skin is more sensitive.Unlike waxing, though, threading glides over the skin, only pulling at hairs and not pinching or irritating the skin—assuming it’s pulled taut like it would be if you were tweezing. Cristy unwinds a few feet of thread and grabs it in the middle. She creates a loop at the midpoint by winding the ends together several times. She then places one loose end in her mouth; one hand holds the other loose end while the other hand holds the loop. These three anchors allow Cristy to alternate pressure that tightly twists the thread together near the loop—and that twisting motion snags errants hairs and pulls them out.3. Speaking of which, it’s way easier on the skin.Cristy says that clients with rosacea or sensitive skin have come to her at their dermatologists’ recommendation, since threading is much gentler than waxing. “No matter how [natural] the wax is, it’s still gonna damage your skin eventually if you do it for long periods of time,” she says.She finds that the tugging involved with waxing can stretch skin out over time, leading to wrinkles or loss of elasticity. Waxing often removes the topmost layer of skin, too, which can weaken cells. (I know I would sometimes notice little blood spots on my skin after a brow wax because of how much was pulled off.)Plus, many wax formulas have chemicals and other additives that can irritate skin. Cristy always offers to apply a soothing lotion to my brows when she’s done, but I always pass because I feel like I don’t need it. And calm skin after any kind of hair removal is certainly nothing to sneeze at.Photo by Mahreen Younus, Groupon